Job Description
Join Nexus Labs at the forefront of technological revolution as we pioneer quantum computing solutions for 2026 and beyond. We seek a visionary Quantum Computing Architect to design next-gen computational frameworks that will redefine industries. In this pivotal role, you'll collaborate with Nobel laureates and lead cross-functional teams to transform theoretical quantum mechanics into scalable commercial applications.
Our Austin-based innovation hub offers unparalleled resources including a 128-qubit quantum processor and access to the nation's fastest quantum network. You'll shape the blueprint for tomorrow's computational landscape while enjoying competitive benefits, flexible work arrangements, and a culture that celebrates intellectual curiosity.
Responsibilities
- Design fault-tolerant quantum circuit architectures for commercial-scale applications
- Develop hybrid quantum-classical algorithms solving optimization problems in logistics and drug discovery
- Lead quantum error correction protocols achieving 99.9% fidelity benchmarks
- Collaborate with hardware teams to co-design quantum processors with 1,000+ qubit capabilities
- Translate complex quantum concepts into actionable technical specifications for engineering teams
- Establish quantum security frameworks resistant to next-gen cryptographic threats
- Mentor junior researchers and publish breakthrough findings in Nature Physics
Qualifications
- PhD in Quantum Computing, Theoretical Physics, or Computer Science with 5+ years industry experience
- Published research on quantum error correction or topological qubits in peer-reviewed journals
- Expertise in quantum programming languages (Q#, Qiskit, Cirq) with demonstrated algorithm implementations
- Proficiency in simulating quantum systems using Qiskit Aer or IBM Quantum Experience
- Strong background in quantum machine learning frameworks (PennyLane, TensorFlow Quantum)
- Experience securing federal grants (NSF, DoE) for quantum research initiatives
- Ability to communicate complex quantum concepts to non-technical stakeholders